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southwestern New Hampshire

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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1973
GSA Bulletin (1973) 84 (12): 3985–3994.
...DAVID M. SCOTFORD Abstract To test the validity of the use of strontium distribution coefficients determined for coexisting feldspars in metamorphic rocks as indicators of metamorphic grade, specimens collected from the metamorphic terrain of southern New Hampshire have been studied. Twenty pairs...
Published: 01 September 2010
DOI: 10.1130/2010.1206(10)
... Five belts of metamorphosed sedimentary and volcanic rocks underlie southwestern Maine and southeastern New Hampshire: Middle Ordovician Falmouth-Brunswick sequence; Middle and Late Ordovician Casco Bay Group, and Late Ordovician to Early Silurian rocks of the Merribuckfred Basin; Late...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2009
The Journal of Geology (2009) 117 (6): 627–641.
... Appalachians. A northeast-trending zone of young, dominantly Late Cretaceous AFT ages (70–118 Ma) extends from southwestern New Hampshire through the central White Mountain region and continues into northern New Hampshire, northeastern Vermont, and western Maine, providing evidence for regional NW-SE extension...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1949
GSA Bulletin (1949) 60 (10): 1613–1670.
...GEORGE E MOORE, JR. Abstract Metamorphosed sedimentary and volcanic rocks, ranging in age from middle Ordovician (?) to lower Devonian, occupy about 55 per cent of the Keene-Brattleboro area of southwestern New Hampshire and southeastern Vermont. Rocks of the low-grade zone of metamorphism...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1949
GSA Bulletin (1949) 60 (8): 1249–1280.
...KATHARINE FOWLER-BILLINGS Abstract Mt. Monadnock, the dominant physiographic feature of the Monadnock region, rises 2000 feet above the New England Upland in southwestern New Hampshire and is the type example of a monadnock. The region is underlain by metamorphic and plutonic rocks that range...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1946
GSA Bulletin (1946) 57 (2): 161–206.
...FREDRICK C KRUGER Abstract The most common rocks in the Bellows Falls quadrangle of southwestern New Hampshire and adjacent Vermont are metamorphic, having been derived from sedimentary and volcanic formations that range in age from middle Ordovician (?) to lower Devonian. Although middle-grade...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1971
American Mineralogist (1971) 56 (5-6): 1005–1041.
... by the gedrite and hornblende formulae are not readily explained by determined gedrite and hornblende structures. There is apparently complete solid solution in the anthophyllite-gedrite series at high temperature as demonstrated in specimens from the sillimanite zone of southwestern New Hampshire...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1950
GSA Bulletin (1950) 61 (1): 43–89.
...MILTON T HEALD Abstract The Lovewell Mountain quadrangle in southwestern New Hampshire is underlain by metasedimentary rocks of the lower Devonian Littleton formation and plutonic rocks of the New Hampshire magma series, which is probably of late Devonian age, The lower portion of the Littleton...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2005
American Mineralogist (2005) 90 (4): 592–606.
... produced during a regional low-pressure, high-temperature metamorphism active between 380–350 Ma. The regional metamorphism is ascribed to lithospheric mantle delamination, followed by asthenospheric mantle upwelling, which heated a wide area of the Merrimack basin (southwestern New Hampshire, central...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 September 1999
Geology (1999) 27 (9): 803–806.
...Matthew J. Kohn; Frank Spear Abstract Oliverian Magma Series gneisses (442–454 Ma) in the cores of domes in southwestern New Hampshire have an igneous mineralogy that crystallized at pressures ( P ) of 9–11 kbar and temperatures ( T ) of 650–775 °C, whereas the cover (Ammonoosuc Volcanics) has...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1991
American Mineralogist (1991) 76 (5-6): 942–955.
... orthoamphibolite localities: about 50 °C higher T and similar P to the Post Pond Volcanics of Vermont, and 50 °C lower T and several kbar lower P than the Ammonoosuc Volcanics in southwestern New Hampshire. Analyses of coexisting cordierite and orthoamphiboles indicate that the same assemblage occurs for a wide...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1952
GSA Bulletin (1952) 63 (4): 381–426.
...CARLETON A CHAPMAN Abstract The rocks of the Sunapee quadrangle, in southwestern New Hampshire, are chiefly metamorphic in origin and range in age from upper Ordovician (?) to lower Devonian. The pre-Devonian rocks, constituted by the Ammonoosuc volcanics, the Clough formation, and the Fitch...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1946
GSA Bulletin (1946) 57 (2): 125–160.
... with soda-rich igneous rocks, in the gneiss complex, resembles that of certain gneissic terranes in southeastern Vermont and southwestern New Hampshire more closely than the microcline-rich gneisses of the crest of the Berkshire Hills. MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE, SOUTH HADLEY, MASS. 28 5 1945...
Image
Photomicrograph of intergrown and mutually exsolved “hornblende” and cummingtonite from the locality 7A7 at “Amphibole Hill,” southwestern New Hampshire, USA (see Kahl and Schumacher 2000; Robinson and Jaffe 1969). Hosts are labeled Hbl are Cumm; fine lamellas in two orientations run approximately north to south and east-northeast to west-southwest.
Published: 01 October 2007
Figure 21. Photomicrograph of intergrown and mutually exsolved “hornblende” and cummingtonite from the locality 7A7 at “Amphibole Hill,” southwestern New Hampshire, USA (see Kahl and Schumacher 2000 ; Robinson and Jaffe 1969 ). Hosts are labeled Hbl are Cumm ; fine lamellas in two
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2000
American Mineralogist (2000) 85 (11-12): 1606–1616.
... of homogene samples . Recherche Aerospatiale , 3 , 13 – 38 . Robinson , P. and H.W. Jaffe ( 1969 a) Chemographic exploration of amphibole assemblages from central Massachusetts and southwestern New Hampshire . Mineralogical Society of America Special Paper , 2 , 251 – 274...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 February 2000
The Canadian Mineralogist (2000) 38 (1): 217–232.
... for the widespread early Jurassic tholeiites. Pb isotope compositions for the lamprophyres fall near the Northern Hemisphere Reference Line; those of the olivine diabase are intermediate between the lamprophyres and more radiogenic Pb compositions typical of the Triassic alkaline dykes at Seabrook, New Hampshire...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 31 December 1936
GSA Bulletin (1936) 47 (12): 1885–1932.
...DAVID MODELL Abstract INTRODUCTION LOCATION The Belknap Mountains are on the southwestern shore of Lake Winnepesaukee, in central New Hampshire. The district of which the geology has been mapped is slightly over one hundred square miles in area and includes adjacent parts of the Winnepesaukee...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1967
AAPG Bulletin (1967) 51 (6): 1004–1026.
... activity in Ohio was directed toward the Cambrian (Copper Ridge Dolomite, “Trempealeau”) in central Ohio, the Silurian “Clinton” sandstones and the Lower Mississippian Berea Sandstone in southwestern Ohio. A new depth record of 11,442 ft. was established in Noble County. S ummary of O il and G as P...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Journal: Geophysics
Published: 01 December 1966
Geophysics (1966) 31 (6): 1105–1122.
...L. A. Anderson; G. V. Keller Abstract Nine deep resistivity probes were made in southeastern Nebraska, southwestern Iowa, central Pennsylvania, southwestern and northeastern New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. The surveys were designed to determine the requirements for crustal-scale...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1985
GSA Bulletin (1985) 96 (8): 990–996.
... in this part of New England until the Permian and that the uplift rate from 275 m.y. to 225 m.y. was ∼3 times as rapid as was the rate for 225 m.y. to the present. The Carboniferous age of the Sebago batholith suggests that currently accepted metamorphic and tectonic interpretations for southwestern Maine...